As U.S. Women's National Team midfielder Carli Lloyd stepped onto the field for Sunday's World Cup final in Vancouver, she was all of the above: a player who could be inspiring one moment and infuriating the next; a player who had sandwiched two outstanding Olympics titles with a 2011 World Cup final to forget. A player, in other words, of many contradictions.

Lloyd of Delran Township, N.J., did her absolute best to simplify her confusing resume with a clearly dominant display on Sunday, scoring three goals in 16 minutes and powering her team to its first World Cup trophy in 16 years.

As the final whistle blew and gold confetti fell on Lloyd, sportswriters and soccer fans lined up to celebrate her, and rightly so.

"Carli Lloyd has a performance for the ages," ran the headline in her native New Jersey.

"Take that, Sundhage!" said one sportswriter, referring to the former coach, Pia Sundhage, who had slammed Lloyd weeks before.

Even the White House chimed in with praise with this tweet:

"What a win for Team USA! Great game @CarliLloyd! Your country is so proud of all of you. Come visit the White House with the World Cup soon."

The accolades were well-earned, but they don't erase Lloyd's complex and contradictory career, which has been a roller coaster ride over the past six years.

In a sports world of slogans and seconds-long Sports Center clips, Lloyd shows how misleadingly simple labels, whether "beast" or "weirdo," goat or great can be.

She also shows how fine the line is between winning and losing. Despite its emphatic 5-2 triumph over Japan on Sunday, the U.S. Women's National Team was — dare we say it? — downright boring at times during this tournament, and Lloyd was not without blame.

In many ways, the midfielder encapsulates American soccer: athletic but sometimes artless, disciplined but also prone to breakdowns, capable of greatness but often coming up short.

Perhaps it's because sports demand simple story lines, or maybe more that women's soccer is televised roughly every four years in this country, but Lloyd functioned like an ink blot for writers tackling this year's World Cup, allowing them to see almost anything they wanted to in the attacking midfielder.

"The player at the heart of the U.S. offense is a stone-cold weirdo," Vice said. "Take a look through her Instagram or Twitter feed for a few minutes. She is a walking motivational post. She loves ice baths. Sometimes, these two interests collide."

"Carli Lloyd is the weirdest world-class professional athlete ever," said SB Nation, a stretch considering the uneven play of so many professional athletes. "Lloyd is often so poor that people who have watched nearly every single one of those 201 games she's played for the national team forget the point of her. They get angry, they scream at their television screens, they Tweet insults, they text their friends things like 'why the f won't Jill f-ing drop Carli already?, even though they know the answer to that question. The answer isn't at the forefront of their brains when they ask, but if they took a step back, calmed down and thought really hard, they'd find it. Carli Lloyd is a big-time player who scores big-time goals in big-time games."

But as a profile in The Wall Street Journal also made clear, Lloyd's basic approach to soccer is actually pretty banal: She just works harder than everyone else.

"Like an eighth-grader at travel-soccer practice, Lloyd sprints up the gym floor dribbling only with her right foot, first the outside, then the inside," Matthew Futterman wrote before the tournament began a month ago. "Then she does the same with her left. On one series, she fakes a kick before each touch, making sure to raise one arm in the exact motion. On another she dips her inside shoulder each time to accent a feint."

"It's all about repetition," Lloyd told the newspaper.

While some of her teammates made headlines with scantily clad photos, Lloyd either was working out or hanging out with her fiance, golf pro Brian Hollins, whom she has dated for 15 years.

Hard work. Repetition. Consistency. Ice. Inspirational messages.

If her "weirdo" public image doesn't quite add up, neither does Lloyd's career.

After a Hall of Fame career at Rutgers, Lloyd launched herself onto the national team in 2005. Three years later, she was the hero at the 2008 Olympics with an overtime goal against Brazil.

But then came the 2011 World Cup. Lloyd didn't just sky her penalty during the decisive shootout loss to Japan. She was woeful before that game as well.

"The U.S. played some of its best soccer of the tournament with Lloyd on the bench late in the semifinal against France," wrote Sporting News in an article listing Lloyd as one of the cup's "goats." "Perhaps she should have stayed there. She did little to help the Americans keep the ball when trying to protect two leads Sunday, and her awful accuracy when shooting was a prelude of shootout nightmares to come. Only a player completely fatigued and/or overwhelmed by the moment hits a penalty kick as high as Lloyd did."

Twelve months later, however, Lloyd was back to being the hero. After starting the tournament on the bench, Lloyd scored both goals in a narrow 2-1 final victory over Japan in the London Olympics. "When someone tells me I can't do something, I'm going to always prove them wrong," she said. "That's what champions do."

By this summer, Lloyd was supposed to be a sure and steady-footed veteran. When Abby Wambach dropped to the bench, Lloyd even acted as captain.

But her play proved erratic once again. Lloyd failed to feed the forwards the ball, spraying errant passes across the field, and the U.S. struggled to score.

For many, it was a familiar sight.

"You've watched her turn in terrible performances in countless friendlies, and in the group stage of the World Cup," wrote SB Nation. "You think she should be dropped to the bench, even though you know what's coming. Part of you, even though you're a fan of this team and want them to win, hopes that she doesn't score, just so the mystique of Carli Lloyd can go away. If she goes an entire tournament without a game-winning goal or assist, maybe then we can finally move on and replace her with someone who doesn't make a dozen turnovers per game, ones which AYSO coaches wouldn't tolerate."

Writer Kevin McCauley went so far as to call her "a relic of a time gone by."

"Her turnovers weren't punished as harshly when women's soccer was a game that was mostly about individual athleticism, and it's not like there were considerably less turnover-prone players behind her," he said. "But as the years have gone by and the game has shifted into something different, one now defined by midfield positioning and possession, Lloyd's deficiencies have gradually become more obvious. Now that every top team has technically skilled, tactically drilled, do-everything midfielders including the United States Lloyd sticks out like a sore thumb. 'Oh god,' you realize, 'that's how everyone used to play soccer. How did we watch that? We've come so far.'"

It's not just armchair coaches who scratch their heads wondering how Lloyd can somehow be so fearsome at times and yet awful at others. It's real coaches, too. Lloyd's own coaches.

"Carli Lloyd was a challenge to coach," former coach Pia Sundhage told The New York Times. "When she felt that we had faith in her, she could be one of the best players. But if she began to question that faith, she could be one of the worst."

The result? An insipid, scoreless draw in which Lloyd and the rest of her team created little excitement.

But then Lloyd buried a penalty against Colombia in the round of 16 and the confidence that had flickered on and off insider her seemed to burst into flame. She climbed over an opponent to bury a game-winning header in the quarterfinal against China and then coolly slotted home another penalty kick against No. 1 Germany in the semi-final.

On Sunday evening, Lloyd seemed to finally unleash the "beast" mode that Mitts had warned about. She scored a screamer off a set piece in the third minute, added a tap-in two minutes later, and launched an audacious half-field lob over the bewildered Japanese goalie's head in minute 16.

The hat trick was the fastest in World Cup history for men or women, and the first in a women's World Cup final.

" 'Big Game Carli' delivers" declared ESPN.

The article ignored Lloyd's 2011 final miss and glossed over her other ups and downs. "Lloyd certainly had her struggles early on," Jeff Carlisle begrudgingly admitted, "but she stayed the course and benefited immensely from a tactical switch by U.S. manager Jill Ellis that saw her pushed closer to goal."

Of course, Carlisle couldn't resist a dig at Lloyd's former coach, writing "one is left to wonder what former U.S. manager Pia Sundhage thinks about her former player now."

But there is no need to wonder, or to pretend that Lloyd has always been "Big Game Carli." Sundhage herself explained how "challenging," contradictory players like Lloyd are ultimately worth the headache.

"Those players who always do exactly what I say, then that's not [always] good," Sundhage said.

"Some players are very challenging and those players, they create gold."